Dan McGowan delights audiences of all ages and sizes with observational comedy and musical parody songs. His credits include winner in the Branson Comedy Festival, appearances on Last Comic Standing and performances world wide. ... (more)

I have been in the business over 25 years and headlined Comedy Clubs and Corporate Shows. I have G, PG, and R rated sets with over 5 hours of material, so I'm sure we can find the perfect set for your guests.... (more)

Corporate Comedian Perry Kurtz is an International multi-media performance artist, providing on-the-spot quality comedy & music, and earning a living at it since 1974. Based in Los Angeles he is available to perform at Parties, Corporate events & more. G to XX Rated
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Tom Myers is a comedian who tackles any subject. Whether the topic is current events, social and political issues or even a topic other comedians would not even approach, Tom is not afraid to make you laugh about it using his straight-talking, no-holds-barred manner.... (more)

Bill was outstanding!! Super job!! He exceeded my expectations and my conference attendees raved about him afterwards! Bill was a complete professional and I definitely look forward to hiring him again. Thanks for the great laughs and for making our evening extra special! -Kisha M, Pittsburgh, PA

I had no idea what to expect, it was over the top!!!! You never cease to amaze me!!! Awesomeness, is all I can come up with!!! It really was awesome!!! The outfits were sooooo Creative!!! Just an all around Good show!!!!

A flamboyant burst of color, feather boas, heels, song, and laughter, entwined with a bit of drag, joke and a tribute to Ricky Martin, hugged the beachside venue of Off Key Tikki, in the form of humorist’s Ike Avelli’s “50 Shades of Gay”, proved to be “the performance of the summer.'

Plug showed up way before schedule and sat patiently waiting. Although it was a loud party and folks insisted on talking, he kept the jokes coming and he was very professional. Everyone said he was funny.

Comedian turned storyteller Dylan Brody’s entire persona seems transported from a calmer, more measured period. He doesn’t go for the shock-and-awe approach of so many stand-up comics, nor does he cultivate an affected, deliberately weird persona like the denizens of alt-comedy circles. What he does only vaguely resembles stand-up at this point, even if he still plays comedy rooms. With his rumpled, hangdog delivery; restrained demeanor; and incisive wit, the playwright, novelist, and performer is often compared to monologist Spalding Gray. Brody’s stories mine humor and pathos from even the most mundane transactions, with a sensibility that is humane and dryly absurd. Within a single routine, he can veer from autobiography into satirical flights of fancy before returning to the personal. There’s an undercurrent of political outrage to Brody’s stories — he moonlights as a Huffington Post blogger, which should give a hint as to his political sympathies — but he doesn’t use the stage as a soapbox. With calm remove, he cuts through the bullshit and reveals the very human motivations behind the challenges of daily life, whether the antagonist happens to be the world’s dumbest (and most polite) mugger, meddling agents and Hollywood suits, or society at large.